Your engineering team is preparing a capital request to replace an aging virtualization cluster next quarter. Three vendors have submitted bids for 2U rack servers that meet the required CPU, memory, and storage specifications. Management insists that the purchasing decision account for the full five-year life-cycle cost, including energy consumption, maintenance contracts, and recycling fees when the hardware is retired. Which of the following procurement analyses will BEST satisfy this requirement?
Negotiate a multiyear extended warranty with the least-expensive supplier.
Select the server model with the highest published mean time between failures (MTBF).
Choose the vendor offering the lowest initial purchase price per server.
Perform a total cost of ownership (TCO) analysis for each vendor bid.
A total cost of ownership (TCO) comparison evaluates every cost incurred from acquisition through disposal-including purchase price, power and cooling, support contracts, and end-of-life recycling-so it provides the most accurate basis for a five-year budget. Relying only on the highest advertised MTBF focuses narrowly on reliability, the lowest unit price ignores operating and disposal expenses, and negotiating an extended warranty addresses break-fix coverage but not energy or retirement costs.
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What is a Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) analysis?
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Why is energy consumption important in TCO for servers?
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What is the mean time between failures (MTBF) and why isn’t it sufficient on its own?